Read Eugénie: The Empress & her Empire Online
Authors: Desmond Seward
4.
‘It did them no harm …’: Primoli (1923).
5.
‘Screaming …’: Alba (1941), p. 5.
5.
‘The Paris …’: A good account of the city at this date is Mansell (2001).
7.
‘In a report…’:
Lettres familières
, I, p. 235.
9.
‘He told the girls …’: Arbeley (1932).
13.
‘Later known as …’: F. Bac (1928b) (a subtly partisan account of the author’s uncle).
14.
‘In a postscript…’:
Lettres familières
, I, p. 22.
16.
‘… a lady of very easy virtue indeed’: Fleischmann (1923), pp. 46–83.
19.
‘… abortive coup’: F.A. Simpson (1923); and Smith (1982).
19.
‘As a hostess …’: A. Revesz (1953).
20.
‘… an ugly, fat little man’: Malmesbury (1884), p. 285.
20.
‘If the handsome …’: Smyth (1921), p. 32; Kurtz (1964), p. 27; Ridley (1979) pp. 169–71.
22.
‘From here …’: J. Richardson (1969) (verging on hagiography).
24.
‘The dinner for four …’: Filon (1920), p. 24.
24.
‘In September …’:
Lettres familières
, I, p. 37.
29.
‘The more respectable …’: Maurois (1956).
32.
‘… at the château of Compiègne’: Hübner’s dispatch to Count Buol, Wellesley and Sencourt (1934); Viel Castel (1884), p. 130.
34.
‘Now it so happened …’: Kurtz (1964), p. 42.
37.
‘So today …’: The emperor’s letter of proposal is in the Alba archives at Madrid.
38.
‘Cowley mentions …’: Cowley, in Wellesley (1928), p. 17.
38.
‘He explained to …’:
Oeuvres de Napoléon III
, III, pp. 357–60; Queen Victoria thought the speech ‘in very bad taste’,
Journal
, 24 January 1853.
39.
‘A marriage …’: Wellesley and Sencourt (1934), p. 17.
40.
‘She tried to explain …’:
Lettres familières
, p. 53.
40.
‘in white velvet …’: Bac (1928a); Lady Augusta’s letter to the Duchess of Kent, transcribed by Queen Victoria into her
Journal; The Times
, 31 January 1853; Hübner (1904), I, p. 105.
T
WO
43.
‘I once held …’: Haussmann (1890–3), I, p. vii.
44.
‘Despite being …’: Bluche (1981).
44.
‘The Second Empire …’: Zeldin (1973), I, pp. 552–8.
44.
‘From the start …’: Fould (1867). Fould’s elder brother, Benoît, founded the banking house Fould et Cie.
45.
‘The emperor’s …’: Christophe (1951); Zeldin (1973), I. p. 549.
45.
‘Eugénie …’: Persigny (1896).
47.
‘… the Imperial household’:
Almanach Impérial
; Verly (1894), pp. 100 ff.
47.
‘… the
Cents Gardes’:
Verly (1894).
47.
‘… the Guides’: Fleury (1897–8), I, p. 226.
48.
‘Hübner saw …’: Hübner (1904), I, p. 143.
49.
‘Emile Ollivier …’: Ollivier,
Journal
, 22 February 1853.
49.
‘Eugénie had her own household …’:
Almanach Impérial
and Verly (1894).
49.
‘In secret…’: Mrs Moulton caught her smoking one in her bedroom; Hegermann-Lindencrone (1912), p. 94.
50.
‘When she told him …’: Viel Castel (1884), II, p. 199.
51.
‘All this was known …’: Bouchot (1896); Carette (1888–91); Whitehurst (1873); Vizetelly (1912).
52.
‘An invitation …’: Hegermann-Lindencrone (1912), pp. 25–31.
52.
‘… not so
petit
’: Hegermann-Lindencrone (1912), p. 31.
53.
‘Certainly there were …’: Crane (ed.) (1905), I, p.135; Gower (1883), I, p. 295
55.
‘Even in winter …’: Murray (1864); Clouzot (1925).
56.
‘Gentle, peaceful days …’: Filon (1920), pp. 61–2.
56.
‘Traditional French hunting …’: Metternich (1922), p. 97.
58.
‘Octave Feuillet…’: Feuillet (1894), pp. 346–66.
60.
‘It was the carefully …’: Wellesley and Sencourt (1928), p. 141.
61.
‘A few years later …’: Hegermann-Lindencrone (1912), p. 96.
65.
‘One night…’: Hegermann-Lindencrone (1912), p. 110.
65.
‘She made friends …’: Hegermann-Lindencrone (1912), pp. 141–2; Thomas (1911).
67.
‘It was a sport…’; Barthez (1912), pp. 84–8.
68.
‘A barely credible …’: Barthez (1912), pp. 175–82.
69.
‘The household …’: Metternich (1922), pp. 28–39.
70.
‘… a compact crowd’: Whitehurst (1873), II, pp. 24–32. 70. ‘His description …’: La Gorce (1894–1905), I, p. 130.
72.
‘His best organised …’: De Luz (1931); Osgood (1960); Zeldin (1973), I, pp. 412–13.
74.
‘… the scourge of the Imperial family’: Hübner (1904), I, p. 310.
74.
‘She adds …’: Bicknell (1893), pp. 64–5.
74.
‘He hated …’: Paléologue (1928), p. 59.
75.
‘A few were respectable …’: Filon (1920), p. 74.
77.
‘The emperor …’: Guest (1952), Queen Victoria,
Journal
, 16–21 April 1855;
The Times
, 16–21 April 1855; Malmesbury (1884), II, pp. 18–20.
78.
‘Everybody raved …’: Disraeli, letter of 1 May 1855 to Mrs Brydges Williams, Monypenny and Buckle (1910–20), IV, p. 5.
79.
‘On 18 August …’: Queen Victoria,
Journal
, 18–27 August 1855; Viel Castel (1884), III, pp. 175–7; Fleury (1897–8), I, pp. 183, 184.
T
HREE
83.
‘… beauty of their own sex’: Sencourt (1931), p. 211.
83.
‘How can you call…’: Ollivier (1961), II, 8 July 1867.
83.
‘After twenty-two hours …’: Hübner (1904), I, p. 403;
The Times
, 17 and 18 March 1856; Viel Castel (1884), III, p. 213.
86.
‘… I am a foreigner’: Kurtz (1964), p. 67.
87.
‘When my mother …’: Filon (1920), p. 11.
88.
‘It was one …’: Clouzot (1925), Clouzot (1939); E. Rouyer (1867); Carette (1888–91), I, pp. 133–46.
90.
‘The best place …’: Moulin (1967); Gaillemin (1990); Cornforth (2002).
91.
‘… loot from the Summer Palace’: first displayed in a memorable exhibition in Paris, which aroused widespread interest;
Gazette des Beaux Arts
, Paris, 1861.
92.
‘A smaller room …’:
Connaissance des Arts
, No. 479, January 1992.
92.
‘An Empress Dresses’: For this chapter Blum and Chassée (1931); Cabris (1901); Uzanne (1898); particularly important are Professor A. Ribeiro, ‘Fashion in the work of Winterhalter’, in Ormond and Blackett (1987), and Byrde (1992).
93.
‘In a letter …’: Barthez (1868), p. 95.
95.
‘There is an acme of dressing …’: Taine (1867), pp. 23–4.
95.
‘Unseen since 1830 …’: Bapst (1889); Vever (1906–8); Bury (1991).
96.
‘When the …’: De Marley (1980).
98.
‘… the bustle’: Whitehurst (1873), II, p. 85.
100.
‘Have you ever …’: Wellesley and Sencourt (1928),
Paris Embassy
, p. 111.
101.
‘… sent to the Mazas prison’: yet Dr Barthez thought that to some extent she still believed in Home: Barthez (1912), p. 164.
102.
‘This was …’: Clotilde de la Bedoyère, Fleischmann (1923), pp. 312–14.
102.
‘Virginie …’: Decaux (1953).
103.
‘Her vain, venal husband …’: Ornano (1958).
105.
‘… photography’: by photographers such as Gustave le Gray.
105.
‘Almost without warning …’: Malmesbury (1884), II, pp. 239, 283.
108.
‘She told the Walewskis …’: Wellesley and Sencourt (1928), p. 273.
F
OUR
109.
‘As they arrived …’: Pack (1958).
112.
‘The campaign …’: Dunant (1863).
114.
‘It was a letter …’: Comte Fleury (1920), II, pp. 29–30
115.
‘… a shirt of Nessus’: Paléologue (1928).
115.
‘… a decorative sovereign’: Loliée (1907b), p. 205.
116.
‘This transformation …’: Zeldin (1973), I, pp. 552–7.
118.
‘The work-people …’: Senior (1880), 19 August 1861.
119.
‘According to …’: Murray (1864), p. 48.
119.
‘The emperor’s …’: Haussmann (1890–3), II, pp. 1 ff.
121.
‘Pauline’s husband …’: Salomon (1931).
F
IVE
124.
‘Eugénie showed …’: Lavisse (1895).
125.
‘… one third those of men’: quoted by Zeldin (1973), I, p. 345.
126.
‘The painter …’: Klumpke (1999), p. 169.
126.
‘Despite her …’: Sand’s novel
Malgrétout
was serialised in the widely read
Revue des Deux Mondes
in February and March 1870.
127.
‘Eugénie was …’: Rollet (1988).
128.
‘The emperor …’: d’Hauterive (1925).
129.
‘There were two sorts …’: Maritain (1930); Daniel-Rops (1965).
130.
‘I was something …’: Paléologue (1928), p. 58.
131.
‘… the pope should stay in Rome’: the emperor’s anonymous pamphlet,
Le Pape et le Congrès
, outraged French Catholics, including Gallicans and even Viel Castel (1884), V, pp. 245–51.
132.
‘Soon the water …’: Lasserre (1892).
133.
‘The Revocation …’: Eugénie to Doña Maria Manuela,
Lettres familières
, II, p. 57.
135.
‘He probably thinks …’ – Filon (1920), p. 68
136.
‘Shortly after …’: Filon (1920), p. 69.
136.
‘… the cholera scares of the 1860s’: ‘The empress spent the day visiting those who have contracted cholera at the Beaujon, Lariboisière and Saint-Antoine hospitals. She went into the wards where victims are being nursed, going to bedsides, asking questions and encouraging patients, in a spirit worthy of a Sister of the Poor’,
Gazette Nationale
, 23 October 1865.
138.
‘Clearly Eugénie …’: Berlioz (1972), p. 620.
138.
‘In November 1864 …’: Clarette (1882).
139.
‘… Ambroise Thomas’: Moulin (1967), p. 63.
139.
‘The bourgeois …’: Flaubert (1926–30).
140.
‘Many of them …’: Filon (1920), pp. 54–5.
140.
‘Jacques Offenbach …’: Krackauer (1937); Harding (1980); and Faris (1980).
142.
‘The irony …’: Krackauer (1937), p. 16.
S
IX
145.
‘Shall America …’: Anon,
Lettres sur les États-Unis d’Amerique
, Paris, 1862.
145.
‘The concept of a Catholic monarchy …’: This did not mean she was hostile to the United States, whatever Nancy Nichols Barker (1965) may say.
146.
‘Early in 1866 …’: The classic narrative account is still Count Corti (1928); Parkes (1960).
149.
‘The emperor assured …’: Zamoyski (1987), p. 284.
150.
‘Historians …’: the report of the conversation is in
Il problemo veneto e l’Europa
, Venice, 1966–67. For the diplomatic context, Taylor (1954).
151.
‘… the crisis over Schleswig-Holstein’: Bismark said that only the Prince Consort, a German professor and Bismarck understood the problem, but the prince had died, the professor had gone mad and he himself had forgotten.
153.
‘Really, Eugénie …’: Viel Castel (1884), VI, p. 132.
154.
‘We are hastening …’: Viel Castel (1884), VI, p. 332.
154.
‘My God …’: Barthez (1912), p. 254.
157.
‘The consternation …’: Wellesley and Sencourt (1934), p. 284.
159.
‘Drouyn resigned …’: Harcourt (n.d.), p. 310.
159.
‘But Eugénie …’: Wellesley and Sencourt (1934), pp. 306–12.
161.
‘… a more adroit courtier’: Smyth (1921), p. 34.
162.
‘I am thinking with terror …’:
Lettres familières
, I, p. 83.
162.
‘… going to die on the scaffold’: Hübner (1904), I, p. 320.
164.
‘Eugénie bought everything …’: Barbara Scott, ‘In the Shadow of Marie-Antoinette’,
Country Life
, 6 December 1979.
165.
‘It really is quite extraordinary …’: Filon (1920), p. 78.
166.
‘For everyone …’: La Gorce (1894–1905), V, p. 151.
167.
‘Clearly, Lillie Moulton …’: Hegermann-Lindencrone (1912), p. 154.
167.
‘… a Winterhalter’: Whitehurst (1873), I, pp. 289–90.
171.
‘When squadron on squadron …’: Sencourt (1931), p. 204.
172.
‘Meeting the empress …’: Daudet (1911), p. 45.
172.
‘Within a week …’:Vandam (1897), p. 319.
173.
‘… she never forgave him’: Guétary (1905), p. 278.